14-night Japan Expedition: Departing October 2021

All inclusive expedition cruise
  • history
    DURATION
    14 nights
  • history
    DURATION DAYS
  • history
    DURATION NIGHTS
    14 nights

The beauty of a expedition cruise are the small group sizes, which ensure that your experience is personal, with minimal impact on the communities and environments you visit.

Enjoy excursions or activities each day, guided by expert Expedition Leaders and lecturers who provide commentary on culture, history, and the region’s unique geology, plants and wildlife to help you connect with these special places.

Expedition highlights:

  • See the famed red Itsukushima Shrine of Miyajima, known as ‘shrine island’ and listed as a UNESCO World Heritage site
  • Explore UNESCO-listed Global Geopark Manjanggul, a 7.4km long Lava Tube and Cave of Jeju Island
  • Discover Japan’s largest museum, Otsuka Museum of Art, which features life-size reproductions of Western art masterpieces
  • Experience Awa ‘fool’s dance’, a well-known traditional dance whose origins date back 400 years
  • Visit Marukin Soy Sauce Historical Museum and take home a memento of Japan’s famous condiment
  • Venture deep into remote Iya Valley, walk through gorges strung with vine bridges and enjoy a river cruise
  • Participate in a soba noodle cooking class and try your hand at making Arita ceramics
  • Try and spot the endangered species, the Tsushima Leopard, and admire Japan’s dramatic island coastlines formed by ancient lava flows and eroded by waves

Photos

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Your expedition at a glance

Inclusions/Exclusions

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Your cruise price includes:

  • Expert Expedition Team and Guest Lecturers
  • An authentic, flexible expedition itinerary
  • All daily guided excursions
  • Lectures, workshops and demonstrations onboard
  • All meals, chef-prepared on board
  • Selected wines and beer with lunch and dinner service
  • Captain’s Welcome and Farewell Events, and Open Bridge Access
  • 24-hour coffee and teas
  • Use of all onboard facilities, including a reference library

Your cruise price does not include:

  • Pre and post flights, transfers and hotels
  • Entry visas/travel permits
  • Travel Insurance
  • Items of a personal nature including but not limited to phone and internet communications and bar charges (outside of the included drinks package as highlighted), laundry charges and souvenir purchases

*Tipping not required

Itinerary

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Embark: Board at 4:00 pm at Harumi Passenger Terminal, Tokyo, on 19 October 2021
Disembark: Arrive and disembark at 8:00 am at Matsugae Pier, Nagasaki, on 2 November 2021 

Tokyo > Kozushima > Kii Oshima > Tokushima > Shodoshima > Osaki Shimojima > Miyajima > Hiroshima > Matsuyama > Ainoshima > Tsushima > Jeju Island (South Korea) > Sasebo > Sasebo Bay Islands > Goto Islands > Nagasaki

Day 1: Depart Tokyo

Board the Coral Adventurer at Tokyo at 4:00 pm for a 7:00 pm departure. Settle into your cabin and relax as we set sail towards the Sea of Japan. This evening, join the Captain’s welcome drinks and meet your crew and fellow guests as the sun sets.

DAY 2- 14:

These are expedition itineraries covering remote regions. Your Captain and Expedition Team may make changes to the daily schedule when necessary to maximise guest experience. Below are the highlight destinations of your voyage.

Kozushima Island

Kozushima is a volcanic island formed from a cluster of lava domes in the Philippine Sea. Inhabited since Japan’s earliest historical era of the Jomon Period, archaeologists have discovered stone tools thousands of years old hewn from obsidian. Myths and legends abound as Kozushima is said to be where ‘Gods gather’ to allocate water resources and the sharing of this precious resource. There is time for snorkelling, diving and kayaking as well as a hike to Mt Tnejyo, the island’s tallest peak. Later, we visit an open-air Onsen, or hot spring, in a natural rock pool setting, to participate in a long-held bathing pastime amongst Japanese that is steeped in traditions and customs.

Kii Oshima

Kii Oshima’s diverse geography dates back to cooled lava dating back 14m years ago, along with sandstone, mudstone, magma and a lava coastline eroded by wind and waves over millennia. The first arrival of American ships which opened trade negotiations between the US and Japan in 1791 is commemorated in the Japan-US Friendship Museum.

Tokushima

The Iya Valley is a remote, mountainous valley with dramatic steep-sided mountain slopes strung with suspension bridges constructed from mountain vines known as kazurabashi. These vine bridges were once the only means for moving people and goods through the challenging terrain with the Wild Monkey Bridge open to visitors who can pull themselves across the river in a wooden cart suspended on a rope. We take a sightseeing boat cruise through the Oboke Gorge, admire artworks and artefacts at the Otsuka Museum of Art, visit a Buddhist temple and experience an Awa Dance performance, which is celebrated annually at a festival dedicated to this dance style.

Shodoshima

One of the first islands born to the Gods in the creation myth of Japan, Shodoshima literally means ‘small bean island’, a fitting name for an island where traditionally soybean crops were processed into soy sauce, though is better known more recently for its olive plantations. Learn about this time-honoured condiment with a 400-year-old history at the Marukin Soy Sauce Historical Museum. Experience the challenge of ‘capturing’ famous ‘Flowing Japanese Bamboo Noodles and visit Misaki no Bunyojyo, the elementary school featured in the famous movie Twenty Four Eyes.

Osaki Shimojima

The portside town of Mitarai developed as a domestic sea trading port during the Edo Period when Japan was isolated from the rest of the world for over two hundred years from the mid-1600’s. During this time Japanese sea traders were ordered to maintain vessels in a weakened state to prevent them from straying outside domestic waters and preserving trade. The remnants of these prosperous times can still be seen today on the waterfront and in the narrow laneways and architecture of preserved buildings. Wander through the alleys and streets of this quaint town and see Buddhist temples and shrines that date even further back than the Edo Period.

Miyajima

The famed Itsukushima Shrine is one of Japan’s most recognisable symbols with its Shinto Shrine and red torii gate seemingly floating upon the Seto Inland Sea. Itsukushima Shrine is a UNESCO World Heritage Site and a National Treasure. Other important sites are Daisho-in, a temple of Shingon Buddhism and Reikado Hall, located on Mt Misen, the highest peak on Miyajima. Walking paths link Miyajima’s cultural sites and Maple Valley, providing the ideal pace with which to absorb centuries-old customs.

Hiroshima

Forever linked to the WWII tragedy that saw an atomic bomb dropped on the city in 1945, Hiroshima has since been rebuilt while retaining some historical heritage, with the Peace Memorial Park now the city’s most prominent feature. Shukkeien Garden dates as far back as the 1600’s with its valleys, mountains and forests represented in miniature with tea houses amongst the gardens an ideal spot to take time to enjoy the idyllic surrounds.

Matsuyama

High on Mount Katsuyama, Matsuyama Castle is one of Japan’s twelve original castles and stands at the heart of the city of Matsuyama. Constructed in the early 1600’s with the three-storied tower added two hundred years later after the original tower collapsed after being struck by lightning. Pilgrims dressed all in white are a frequent site at Ishitji Temple, where an inner temple connects to the main temple grounds via a dimly cave and 200m long tunnel that houses Buddhist statues, carvings and drawings.

Ainoshima

Ainoshima Island is often referenced in poetry and the island is home to some of the region’s most interesting sites. The Ainoshima Stone Tunnel was built in the 5th century, Megane Iwa is a striking rock formed by lava and erosion rising from the sea while the Hanaguriserock formation is a columnar sheer cliff. The island is popular with birdwatchers as migratory birds nest on Ainoshima.

Tsushima

Roughly halfway between the Japanese mainland and the Korean Peninsula, Tsushima was once a single island before a canal divided the island in two in the 1600’s, then into three islands in the 1900’s with a second canal constructed. Though in reality there are approx. 100 islands that collectively make up Tsushima with its abundance of natural beauty and untouched forests. Birdwatching is a popular pastime, particularly within the Tsushima Wildlife Conservation Centre, home to the Tsushima Leopard Cat, an endangered species.

Jeju (South Korea)

Jeju Volcanic Island with its Manjanggual Lava Tubes are regarded as the finest lava tube system of caves anywhere in the world and are recognised by UNESCO as a Global Geopark site for their unique geological features and volcanic landforms. The Jeonbang Falls is Korea’s only waterfall that tumbles directly into the sea, while Seongsan Ilchulbong Peak is a flat-topped crater that rose from the sea over 100,000 years ago. The near-circular crater is popular for its walking trails and elevated position to view the sunrise or sunset

Sasebo Islands

The Maritime Self Defence Force Sasebo Museum showcases historical naval vessels alongside the Former Sasebo Navy Club which dates back to the late 1800’s. At Mukyudo, an air raid shelter is unique amongst Japan’s countless shelters as it was built by school children in the style of a school. The historical pottery town of Arita is where Japan’s fine porcelain was first produced around 400 years ago. Arita-yaki pottery is now the most highly regarded pottery across all Japan with its ‘secret ingredient’ kaolin the essential mineral required to make fine porcelain. We try our hand at pottery making with an opportunity to make our very own Arita ceramics. Later, we explore some of the 200 or isles of the Sasebo Islands with opportunities to swim, snorkel, dive and kayak, keeping an eye out for the pods of dolphins which frequent these waters

Goto Islands

The 140 or so Goto Islands are best known for Christianity which was a forbidden religion until the late 1870’s when the ban was lifted. Goto Island translates into English as the ‘five island chain’, with Nakadori Island one of the five main islands. With around 50 churches dotted across the prefecture, such as the UNESCO World Heritage-listed Kashiragashima Church with its stone construction, other interesting sites include the Whale Museum and the Stone Monuments of Wakamatsu Island.

Day 15: Arrive Nagasaki

Our voyage ends in the Japanese port of Nagasaki. Disembark Coral Adventurer at 8:30 am and bid farewell to new-found friends, the Master and crew.

Dates and Prices

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19 Oct-02 Nov 2021 - One departure only!

Please note prices are subject to availability at time of booking and may change without notice.

  • Bridge Deck Balcony Suite - From $21,990 pp twin share
  • Bridge Deck Balcony Stateroom - From $16,800 pp twin share
  • Explorer Deck Balcony - From $15,500 pp twin share / $23,250 sole use
  • Promenade Deck - From $12,990 pp twin share / $19,485 sole use
  • Coral Deck - From $10,990 pp twin share / $16,485 sole use

Accommodation

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Promenade Deck Staterooms are located below the Explorer Deck and are furnished with a junior King size bed which can be separated into two singles. A large picture window gives you wide views of the world outside.

Launched in April 2019, Coral Adventurer is a 120 passenger ship built to take you closer to unspoiled vistas in comfort, style and safety.

Expedition capabilities

  • Two trademark Xplorer tenders seat all passengers and facilitate comfortable shore excursions
  • Six zodiacs for more intrepid exploration
  • Lecture lounge for daily expedition briefings and expert presentations
  • On board library featuring books on destinations and wildlife
  • Shallow draft and advanced navigation and propulsion systems allowing access to locations closed to large cruise ships

Food and wine features

  • Single seating dining with communal table serves buffet breakfast and lunch, and multi-course table d’hote dinners
  • Showcase galley with viewing window creating fresh small-batch cuisine featuring Australian and local produce
  • Multiple indoor and outdoor bars, including our Explorer bar on the sundeck for sunset drinks
  • Curated wine cellar featuring boutique wines and exceptional vintage Australian reds

Guest comfort

  • All outside-facing guest cabins with ensuite bathrooms; the majority have a private balcony
  • Active stabilisers to dampen sea motion
  • Well-equipped gym
  • Passenger elevator
  • Universally compatible power outlets
  • Wi-Fi available in all guest areas

FAQs

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T&Cs

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Travel at 60 and supplier booking conditions apply.

Save 10% on bookings made before 31 August 2020 with our Early Bird Offer. All fares and offers are subject to availability, and may not be combinable with other offers except Xplorer Club Benefits or Onboard Offer. Offers are valid on new bookings only on selected departures. Prices and discounts listed are in Australian dollars, per person, based on twin share. Discounts are not redeemable for cash, non-refundable, and non-transferable. Coral Expeditions reserves the right to correct errors or omissions or make any necessary changes at any time.

This itinerary is an indication of the destinations we visit and activities on offer. Throughout the expedition, the crew may make changes to the itinerary as necessary to maximise your expeditionary experience. Allowances may be made for seasonal variations, weather, tidal conditions and any other event that may affect the operation of the vessel. The itinerary includes the possibility of interaction with wild animals and this interaction is subject to the presence of this wildlife on the day.

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